More than two dozen companies are involved in producing and maintaining the hundreds of mascot costumes across professional sports. SportsBusiness Journal contacted each team in the NFL, NBA, NHL and MLB, as well as each MiLB ballclub above the rookie league level, and asked: Who makes your suits?

Following are some of the firms that have notable stakes.

Alinco

■ Headquarters: Salt Lake City
■ Founded: 1961
■ Website: alincocostumes.com
■ Key executives: Lowla Allen, director of marketing; Jill Palmer, vice president of operations; Kevin Wasden, vice president of creative services
■ Clients: Approximately one-quarter of the big league clubs, with half the NBA, including the Memphis Grizzlies (Grizz); four MiLB teams
■ Of note: Created the San Diego Chicken in 1974 for promotional use by San Diego rock ’n’ roll station KGB-FM.

FiberWorks

■ Headquarters: Phoenix
■ Founded: 1982
■ Website: fiberworks.us
■ Key executives: Donna Nagel and Joe Turnbough
■ Clients: 13 big league clubs spread across all four leagues, including the Houston Rockets for costumes for Clutch since his creation in 1995
■ Of note: Work includes three cardinals: NFL Arizona, MLB St. Louis and Class AA Springfield (Mo.)

International Mascot Corp.

■ Headquarters: Edmonton and Atlanta
■ Founded: 1983
■ Website: internationalmascot.com
■ Key executives: Joel Leveille, president; Brendan Watson, general manager of operations
■ Clients: Nine big league teams, including the Oakland A’s (Stomper)
■ Of note: Also provides the characters for the Home Depot Tool Race at Atlanta Braves games, as well as Toothy, Bristles and Fresh, the dental-themed racing mascots for the Colorado Rockies.

■ Headquarters: West Grove, Pa.
■ Founded: 1999
■ Website: raymondeg.com
■ Key executives: David Raymond, emperor of fun and games; Randy Carfagno, sultan of silly
■ Clients: Two big league clubs, including the Tampa Bay Lightning (ThunderBug); eight MiLB teams
■ Of note: Company founder Raymond was the original Phillie Phanatic. His company makes fewer costumes now than in its early days, serving more as a mascot and team branding consulting group.

Scollon Productions
■ Headquarters: White Rock, S.C.
■ Founded: 1968
■ Website: scollon.com
■ Key executives: Rick Scollon, CEO; Ellery Locklear, president
■ Clients: Nine big league clubs, including the Carolina Panthers (Sir Purr)
■ Of note: All of its current big league clients are in the NFL or NHL, but Scollon also works with a dozen MiLB clubs.

■ Headquarters: Minneapolis
■ Founded: 1980
■ Website: vee.com
■ Key executives: Dayna Deutsch, senior vice president of sales and marketing; Jim Waters, senior vice president of production; Jack Pence, general manager, production services, costumes and creatures
■ Clients: Nine big league clubs, with at least one in each of the four big leagues, including the NHL Minnesota Wild (Nordy)
■ Of note: Generated additional exposure this summer by building a 12-foot-tall likeness of Mutual of Omaha-sponsored golfer Fred Funk on the grounds of that sponsor company’s headquarters to welcome the U.S. Senior Open to Omaha, Neb.

Note: Of the 122 big league teams, 20 do not have mascots. The New Orleans Pelicans, who are in the midst of replacing the team’s previous Hornets identity, have not yet selected a mascot provider for their new character.
Sources: Mascot company websites, MLB, NFL, NBA and NHL teams
Compiled by David Broughton, Brandon McClung and Stephanie Brown